California Teachers' Quarterly, Τόμος 1,Τεύχος 2

Εξώφυλλο
California Teachers' Association, 1907

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Σελίδα 81 - So is the potter sitting at his work, .and turning the wheel about with his feet; he will fashion the clay with his arm...
Σελίδα 81 - All these put their trust in their hands; And each becometh wise in his own work. Without these shall not a city be inhabited, And men shall not sojourn nor walk up and down therein.
Σελίδα 81 - So is the smith sitting by the anvil, And considering the unwrought iron : The vapour of the fire will waste his flesh ; And in the heat of the furnace will he wrestle with his work ; The noise of the hammer will be ever in his ear And his eyes are upon the pattern of the vessel ; He will set his heart upon perfecting his works, And he will be wakeful to adorn them perfectly.
Σελίδα 81 - ... he will fashion the clay with his arm, and will bend its strength in front of his feet; he will apply his heart to finish the glazing, and he will be wakeful to make clean the furnace.
Σελίδα 31 - ... part for the change from the rough school of fifty years ago from which the teacher was not seldom pitched into the road by his bigger pupils, to the happy, orderly school room of today. Women teachers have accepted a salary scarcely half what men of like capacity would have accepted. They have thus been the means of extending the public school system to a point far beyond what taxpayers would have borne if equal intelligence had been secured from men. For these and other services in education...
Σελίδα 44 - THE SEA THE Sea! the Sea! the open Sea! The blue, the fresh, the ever free ! Without a mark, without a bound, It runneth the earth's wide regions 'round; It plays with the clouds; it mocks the skies; Or like a cradled creature lies.
Σελίδα 29 - I discovered the reason to lie in the smallness of the remuneration, which is insufficient to attract a good class of men. This I think a serious defect, and I venture to suggest that higher salaries should be paid to teachers of both sexes, but especially to men, in order to make it worth their while to take up the profession not merely as a duty but as a remunerative occupation.
Σελίδα 55 - Real opulence consists in having many. What truly indicates excellent knowledge, is the habit of constant, sudden, and almost unconscious allusion, which implies familiarity, for it can arise from that alone, — and this very species of incidental, casual, and perpetual reference to ' the mighty world of eye and ear,' is the particular characteristic of Shakespeare.
Σελίδα 29 - The boy in America is not being brought up to punch another boy's head, or to have his own punched in a healthy and proper manner. There is a strange, indefinable feminine air coming over American men — a tendency toward a common or sexless tone of thought" Perhaps this paper can best be closed by quoting from woman herself.
Σελίδα 31 - ... interests of education. Women outnumber the men in high schools already ; and below the high school they reign supreme. Many large city schools of grammar grade employ no men teachers. A majority of boys and girls never come under the instruction of men. There is danger in this of a one-sided development; both sexes are being educated by the sex whose relation to the political and industrial systems is not usually that of either voters or wage-earners. Less than one woman in five is engaged in...

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